Fiber orienting technology

ABSTRACT

An apparatus and method for accelerating food product in order to cause the product to be stretched aligning the fibers of the product.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for accelerating food product in order to cause the product to be stretched aligning the fibers of the product.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Current forming technology relies on high pressure, speed and complicated material flow pathways which produce a product lacking in quality. High pressure works the meat cells, the higher the pressure the more massaging or squeezing of the meat cells takes place. High speed combined with a complicated flow path massages and works the meat product, releasing myosin/actin from the cells causing the muscle fiber to bind together and contract (protein bind). The contraction takes place during high heat application as in cooking. The action of the meat fiber is to contract in length, this contraction combined with protein bind not only shortens the muscle fiber which if not controlled causes odd cook shapes but a rubber like texture with a tough bite.

In muscle, actin is the major component of thin filaments, which together with the motor protein myosin (which forms thick filaments), are arranged into actomyosin myofibrils. These fibrils comprise the mechanism of muscle contraction. Using the hydrolysis of ATP for energy, myosin heads undergo a cycle during which they attach to thin filaments, exerting a tension, and then depending on the load, perform a power stroke that causes the thin filaments to slide past, shortening the muscle.

Muscle fibril structure is measured from micrometers to several millimeters in length. These fibril structures are bundled together to form muscles. Myofibril proteins are the largest group and probably more is known about these proteins than any other. In muscle cells actin is the scaffold on which myosin proteins generate force to support muscle contraction. Myosin is the major protein that is extracted from the muscle cells by mechanical means.

An important purpose of tumbling and massaging is to solubiliize and extract myofibril proteins to produce a protein exudate on the surface of the meat. The exudates bind the formed pieces together upon heating. Binding strength also increases with increased massaging or blending time. This is due to increased exudate formation on the surface of the meat. Crude myosin extraction is increased with increased blending time.

Grinding/chopping utilizes the concept of rupturing the cell to release protein. This mechanical chopping or shearing takes place at the shear/fill plate hole. This process extracts actin and myosin from muscle cells.

Mixing, utilizes friction and kinetic energy to release protein extraction. Fill hole shape and spacing can cause dead spots and turbulence in the meat flow. This change of direction is a form of mixing and massaging. This is another process, which extracts actin and myosin from muscle cells.

Massaging, utilizes friction and kinetic energy to increase protein extraction. This action takes place almost anywhere meat comes in contact with processing equipment and is moved or has a change of direction via pressure. This is also a procedure which involves extracting actin and myosin from muscle cells.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the present invention for the fiber orientation technology to reduce the release and mixing of myosin with actin. It is an object of the present invention for the fiber orientation technology to control orientation of the fiber. It is an object of the present invention for the fiber orientation technology to provide less myosin activity resulting in a better bite/bind and control over the final cook shape.

The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for accelerating food product in order to cause the product to be stretched aligning the fibers of the product. It is an object of the present invention for a hole or orifice to change size from a larger to a smaller cross-sectional area with vertical or concave sides having a sharp edge. The principle has design similarities to a venturi. It is referred to as a choke plate, nozzle, venturi, orifice, or a restriction to flow which results in product acceleration with a corresponding pressure drop through the orifice.

By reducing the cross-sectional area of a tube through which a substance passes, the velocity is increased. This is the principle of Conservation of Mass. When the velocity increases the pressure of the material is reduced. This is the principle of the Conservation of Energy.

For every liquid, there is a ratio between the cross-sectional area (C) and the cross-sectional area (c) through which velocity can only be increased by reducing temperature or increasing pressure. Although ground meat is not a homogeneous liquid, the same concepts still apply. It is impossible to attain choked flow unless there is a transition between the orifices and the small orifice has a finite length.

A venturi allows a smooth transition from a larger orifice to a smaller one. This transition minimizes flow transitions and thereby reduces restrictions in the system. The transmission minimizes energy loss and supports fiber alignment.

The transition in a venturi is extremely difficult to create in a production tooling environment. As a result, using the geometric properties of a sphere or similar shape allows the ability to obtain many of the venturi effect properties using standard production practices.

All points on a sphere are the same distance from a fixed point. Contours and plane sections of spheres are circles. Spheres have the same width and girth. Spheres have maximum volume with minimum surface area. All of the above properties allow meat to flow with minimum interruptions. There are not static or dead zones. No matter what angle the cylinder intersects the sphere, the cross section is always a perfect circle.

It is an object of the present invention to increase meat velocity forcing linear fiber alignment.

It is an object of the present invention to have spherical geometry or a similar shape in fill or stripper plate to create venturi effects.

It is an object of the present invention for the process to make a patty cool uniformly and soften the texture/bite of the product.

The present invention relates to a food patty molding machine having a mold plate and at least one mold cavity therein. A mold plate drive is connected to the mold plate for driving the mold plate along a given path, and a repetitive cycle, between a fill position and a discharge position. A food pump is provided for pumping a moldable food product through a fill passage connecting the food pump to the mold cavity when the mold plate is in the fill position. A fill plate, interposed in the fill passage adjacent to the mold plate has a multiplicity of fill orifices distributed in a predetermined pattern throughout an area aligned with the mold cavity when the mold plate is in fill position. It is an object of the present invention for the fill orifices to define paths through the fill plate, wherein some of the paths each have a path portion obliquely angled or perpendicular to the fill side of the mold plate. It is an object of the present invention for the paths to comprise spherical intersections or a curved structure. It is an object of the present invention for the side of the fill plate which is in contact with the stripper plate to comprise a spherical hemisphere or curved structure which has a cross sectional area between approximately 1.5 to 3.0 times greater than a cylindrical portion which intersect the top of the mold plate perpendicularly or at an angle of less than or equal to +/−75 degrees, or +/−45 degrees in a preferred embodiment as measured from vertical in the longitudinal direction of the mold plate. By a reduction in the cross-sectional area a “choked-flow” condition is created. By using spherical sections or a curved structure, intersections between cylinder and spheres or curved structures create transitions which can be manufactured whose geometry approaches a venturi style system. It is preferred to have a sharper edge from the edge to the hole. It is an object of the present invention to make the edge sharper with a grinder. It is an object of the present invention for the fill plate to be chrome coated on the side adjacent to the stripper plate with a material significantly harder than the fill plate material. This is because the stripper plate wears out. The piece is 39 Rockwell C. It becomes approximately 60-65 Rockwell C. It is an object of the present invention for the material to be applied in a thickness to facilitate a surface which cuts the food product upon movement of a stripper plate. The material goes from 1/1000^(th) of an inch to 5/1000^(th) of an inch with the chrome. A cutting hemisphere into bottom of plate, with a cylinder.

It is an object of the present invention for the stripper plate to be interposed in the fill passage immediately adjacent to the fill plate. It is an object of the present invention for the stripper plate to be movable in a direction transverse to the mold plate, between the fill and discharge locations. It is an object of the present invention for the stripper plate to have a multiplicity of fill openings aligned one-for-one with the fill orifices in the fill plate when the stripper plate is in fill position. It is an object of the present invention for the stripper plate drive to be synchronized with the mold plate drive, such that the movement of the stripper plate facilitates the cutting of the meat product, which was pushed through the fill plate by the food pump. It is an object of the present invention for the stripper plate drive to move the stripper plate to its discharge position, in each mold cycle, before the mold plate moves appreciably toward the discharge location. It is an object of the present invention for the stripper plate drive to maintain the stripper plate in the discharge position until the mold plate cavity is displaced beyond the fill orifices.

It is an object of the present invention for the fill paths to be in a direction to the front or rear of the machine. It is an object of the present invention for all fill paths to consist of a hemispherical shape which is intersected by a cylindrical shape at an angle less or equal to +/−75 degrees of vertical, and preferably +/−45 degrees of vertical.

It is an object of the present invention to use spherical geometry, with cylindrical intersections, and the ratio of the area of the sphere divided by the area of the cylinder greater than or equal to approximately 1.5 to 3.0 to create conditions to meat flow which maintain improved cell structure.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is an unassembled view of a fill plate and stripper plate of the present invention.

FIG. 2 is an assembled view of a fill plate and stripper plate of the present invention.

FIG. 3 shows a side view of an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 4 shows a top view of an embodiment of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

FIG. 1 shows an unassembled view of a fill plate 10, stripper plate 12 and a top plate 14.

FIG. 2 shows an assembled view of the fill plate 10, stripper plate 12 and top plate 14, further comprising a stripper plate spacer and hold down 16, a cylindrical section 18 and a curved section 20.

FIG. 3 shows a side view of the patty molding machine having an auger driver motor 30 an auger 32, knockouts 34 and a shear plate drive cylinder 36.

FIG. 4 shows a top view of an embodiment of the present invention, having a stripper plate drive 40, a fill and stripper plate assembly 42, a mold plate 44 and a draw bar 46.

The present invention relates to fiber orientation technology. The fiber orientation technology drops pressure across the fill plate, aligns the fibers of meat so that the contraction of the muscle fiber that does take place is in a direction of choice controlling both bite and shrinkage. The fiber orientation technology provides a lower resistance to product flow using a wider opening.

The fiber orientation technology provides a better shear surface for a cleaner cut. The fiber orientation technology aligns the fibers in the fill hole so the shearing action disrupts as few muscle cells as possible. The fiber orientation technology decreases the total area of metal fill plate blocking the meat flow resulting in less direction change to the product which works the meat. The fiber orientation technology pulls the meat fiber through the fill hole instead of pushing using the principles of the venturi/choke plate.

All of these characteristics of fiber orientation technology reduce the release and mixing of myosin with actin, the net effect is a controlled orientation of the fiber, less myosin activity resulting in a better bite/bind and control over the final cook shape.

Spherical geometry in fill or stripper plate creates venturi effects.

The process of the present invention makes a patty cool uniformly and soften the texture/bite of the product.

A food patty molding machine has a mold plate and at least one mold cavity therein. A mold plate drive is connected to the mold plate for driving the mold plate along a given path, and a repetitive cycle, between a fill position and a discharge position. A food pump pumps a moldable food product through a fill passage connecting the food pump to the mold cavity when the mold plate is in the fill position. A fill plate, interposed in the fill passage immediately adjacent to the mold plate has a multiplicity of fill orifices distributed in a predetermined pattern throughout an area aligned with the mold cavity when the mold plate is in fill position. The fill orifices define paths through the fill plate, wherein some of the paths each have a path portion obliquely angled or perpendicular to the fill side of the mold plate. The paths consist of spherical intersections or a curved structure. The side of the fill plate which is in contact with the stripper consists of a spherical hemisphere or curved structure which has a cross sectional area approximately 1.5 to 3.0 times greater than a cylindrical portion which intersect the top of the mold plate perpendicularly or at an angle of less than or equal to +/−75 degrees, or +/−45 degrees in a preferred embodiment as measured from vertical in the longitudinal direction of the mold plate. By a reduction in the cross-sectional area a “choked-flow” condition is created. By using spherical sections or a curved structure, intersections between cylinder and spheres or curved structures create transitions which can be manufactured whose geometry approaches a venturi style system. It is preferred to have a sharper edge from the edge to the hole. To get a perfect edge it is preferred to sharpen with a grinder.

In a preferred embodiment, the fill plate is chrome coated on the side adjacent to the stripper plate with a material significantly harder than the fill plate material. This is because the stripper plate wears out. The piece is 39 Rockwell C. It becomes approximately 60-65 Rockwell C. The material is applied in a thickness to facilitate a surface which cuts the food product upon movement of a stripper plate. The material goes from 1/1000^(th) of an inch to 5/1000^(th) of an inch with the chrome. A cutting hemisphere into bottom of plate, with a cylinder.

A stripper plate is interposed in the fill passage immediately adjacent to the fill plate. The stripper plate is movable in a direction transverse to the mold plate, between the fill and discharge locations. The stripper plate has a multiplicity of fill openings aligned one-for-one with the fill orifices in the fill plate when the stripper plate is in fill position. A stripper plate drive is synchronized with the mold plate drive, such that the movement of the stripper plate facilitates the cutting of the meat product, which was pushed through the fill plate by the food pump. The stripper plate drive moves the stripper plate to its discharge position, in each mold cycle, before the mold plate moves appreciably toward the discharge location. The stripper plate drive maintains the stripper plate in the discharge position until the mold plate cavity is displaced beyond the fill orifices.

The fill paths can be in a direction to the front or rear of the machine. All fill paths consist of a hemispherical shape which is intersected by a cylindrical shape at an angle less or equal to +/−75 degrees of vertical, and preferably +/−45 degrees of vertical.

The use of spherical geometry, with cylindrical intersections, and the ratio of the area of the sphere divided by the area of the cylinder greater than or equal to approximately 1.5 to 3.0 creates conditions to meat flow which maintain improved cell structure. 

1. A food patty molding machine, comprising: a mold plate having at least one mold cavity therein, along a given path, in a repetitive cycle, between a fill position and a discharge position; food pump for pumping a moldable food product; a fill passage connecting said food pump to said mold cavity when said mold plate is in said fill position; a fill plate, interposed in said fill passage adjacent to said mold plate; said fill plate having a multiplicity of fill orifices distributed in a predetermined pattern throughout an area aligned with said mold cavity when said fill plate is in its fill position; said fill orifices defining paths through said fill plate, wherein a plurality of said paths each have an outlet path portion at an angle of approximately 0 to 75 degrees from center of the holes vertical axis; a stripper plate interposed in said fill passage adjacent side of said fill plate opposite said mold plate, and movable along a path transverse to said mold plate path between said fill location and discharge position; said stripper plate having a multiplicity of fill openings aligned one-for-one with said fill orifices as extensions thereof when said stripper plate drive is in said fill location; and stripper plate drive, synchronized with said mold plate drive between its fill location and discharge location.
 2. The food patty molding machine of claim 1 wherein said plurality of said paths each have an outlet path portion at an angle of approximately 0 to 45 degrees from center of the holes vertical axis
 3. The food patty machine of claim 1 wherein said orifices are spaced in direction of movement and said orifices have cross section areas such that the ratio of area of the spherical section in the fill to cross sectional area of the cylindrical area of the fill plate is greater than approximately 1.5 to 3.0.
 4. The food patty machine of claim 3 having a fill plate utilizing the intersection of a spherical section with a cylinder in order to create a cross section which represents a venturi orifice.
 5. A fill plate which comprises a multiplicity of holes which are comprised of a spherical section which intersects a cylindrical section at an angle of approximately 0 to 75 degrees in the direction of the mold plate longitudinal movement in a direction towards the front of the machine or as alternative to the back of the machine.
 6. The fill plate of claim 5, in which the ratio of the cross sectional area of the spherical section and the cross sectional area of the cylindrical section are of a ratio to create a choked flow effect on the moldable food product as it passes through the fill plate.
 7. A fill plate which comprises a multiplicity of holes which are comprised of a spherical section which intersects a cylindrical section at an angle of approximately 0 to 45 degrees in the direction of the mold plate longitudinal movement in a direction towards the front of the machine or as alternative to the back of the machine.
 8. A fill plate which has a coating on side of the stripper plate which is metallurgically harder than the base material which is of a thickness to facilitate cutting of moldable food product fibers in a perpendicular cut.
 9. The food patty molding machine of claim 1 wherein said moldable food product comprises meat.
 10. The food patty molding machine of claim 1 wherein said machine reduces release and mixing of myosin with actin in said moldable food product.
 11. The food patty molding machine of claim 1 wherein said machine controls orientation of fiber in said moldable food product.
 12. The food patty molding machine of claim 1 wherein said machine provides less myosin activity resulting in a better bite/bind and control over final cook shape of said moldable food product.
 13. The food product molding machine of claim 1 wherein said machine accelerates food product in order to cause said moldable food product to be stretched aligning fibers of said product.
 14. The food product molding machine of claim 1 wherein said fill orifices change size from a larger to a smaller cross-sectional area with vertical or concave sides having a sharp edge.
 15. The food product molding machine of claim 1 which comprises a choke plate, nozzle, venturi, orifice, or a restriction to flow which results in product acceleration with a corresponding pressure drop through said orifice.
 16. The food product molding machine of claim 1 wherein said fill plate or said stripper plate have a spherical geometry or a similar shape to create venturi effects.
 17. A food patty molding machine comprising: a mold plate and at least one mold cavity therein; a mold plate drive connected to said mold plate a food pump for pumping a moldable food product through a fill passage connecting said food pump to said mold cavity when said mold plate is in fill position; a fill plate, interposed in said fill passage adjacent to said mold plate a multiplicity of fill orifices distributed in a predetermined pattern throughout an area aligned with said mold cavity when said mold plate is in fill position; said fill orifices define paths through said fill plate, wherein some of said paths each have a path portion obliquely angled or perpendicular to said fill side of said mold plate; said paths comprising spherical intersections or a curved structure.
 18. The food patty molding machine of claim 17 further comprising: side of said fill plate in contact with said stripper plate comprise a spherical hemisphere or curved structure which has a cross sectional area approximately 1.5 to 3.0 greater than a cylindrical portion which intersects top of said mold plate perpendicularly or at an angle of less than or equal to +/−75 degrees, as measured in longitudinal direction of said mold plate.
 19. The food patty molding machine of claim 18 wherein said angle is less than or equal to +/−45 degrees as measured from vertical in longitudinal direction of said mold plate.
 20. The fill plate of claim 8 wherein said fill plate is chrome coated on side adjacent to stripper plate with a material significantly harder than fill plate material.
 21. The fill plate of claim 20 wherein said fill plate has a hardness of approximately 60-65 Rockwell C after it is coated.
 22. The fill plate of claim 8 wherein said coating is applied in a thickness to facilitate a surface which cuts food product upon movement of a stripper plate. 